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Making Scottish Passport wasn't all plain sailing
Touring Europe to make new show Scottish Passport wasn't all plain sailing. but it sure beats workingOUR man Paul English reveals how flying around Europe to make new show Scottish Passport wasn't always easy.11:24, 5 JAN 2013Updated12:14, 8 JAN 2013Paul English with Scottish Passport crew
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IN Harry Potter, it's Platform 9 the mystical portal for the trip to Hogwarts.
In Scottish Passport, it's Gate 52 the mystical portal for the trip to Paris.
Or it should be. If you spot it. If you realise that Gate 52 in Glasgow Airport's international departures comes before 27, after Dorothy Perkins, next to some bar or other, squeezed in like a secret.
It's there to mock the sort of traveller, or, say, three man TV crew making a holiday series, who turns up early and burns dead time drinking coffee in an airport caf The sort you might see laughing and joking on a casual saunter along the moving walkway and all the way through international departures where they reach Gate 50 and discover there's nothing beyond it but a soft play area, nice views of the Kilpatrick Hills and a kind lady who explains that we've walked past Gate 52, that it's round the other side of the airport, and that we've probably missed our flight.
The sort you'll see sprinting through an airport laden with tripods and bags and cameras to discover there's no "probably" about it and we'd be going to France the long way round.
But this isn't something you'll see in the new series of Scottish Knockoff hermes look alike bags Passport, thanks to the magic of television and a production team who can like the wizards of Platform 9 come back with more potential footage than The Hobbit having magicked two days' worth of filming into the equivalent of a tea break visit to Paris.
After haring around six European destinations on 10 flights in nine days last year, my filming schedule was this incident aside a more relaxed affair for Scottish Passport 2013.
We'd visit half a dozen Euro hot spots Paris, Salou, Gran Canaria, Menorca, Prague and the village of Flims in the Swiss Alps over a period of six weekends in late summer/early autumn.
Our brief was to present a family friendly, everyman guide to the continent, featuring the obligatory straw hat, bad shorts and Scotland's whitest legs.
It began with a return to Flims, Switzerland, an Alpine village in the Graubunden region, popular as a winter sports resort, as I'd discovered on an earlier Knockoff hermes handbags sale ski visit last spring for the Record's travel pages.
Surprisingly, peak season here is summer, with hiking, biking and swimming in the naturally warm mountain lakes apparently drawing more punters each year than the board and ski fraternity.
Our visit coincided with the annual Perseids meteor shower a thrilling celestial light display, which I know from experience can also be viewed from the "Car Park in the Sky" in Paisley if you don't have a Swiss Alp to hand. You won't spot mountain beaver, or marmots as they're Knockoff hermes outlet store known, in Paisley though, where the local wildlife is quite different. So it's worth making that extra effort.
Forever in pursuit of the authentic holiday experience, we encountered our fair share of sundry other pratfalls, not all of them coming from my suitcase.
Amid the beautiful beaches of Menorca, gorgeous tapas of Catalonia and unexpected Knockoff hermes bags sale beauty of inland Gran Canaria, we crashed the car; had anonymous notes pushed under hotel room doors from an angry Spanish driver asking for money; got lost in Menorca; soaked in Salou and saw a man ride off into the Alps with our kit in the back of his pick up truck.
Filming Gonzo style in holiday resorts was often a logistical nightmare. There's nothing a curious tourist enjoys more when on holiday than the sight of a cameraman and a presenter trying to pretend they're not there. No sooner had the latest bus load of tourists trundled past with their wheely cases than someone would pop up over the cameraman's shoulder playing a trumpet.
At times it felt like Antoine De Caunes and his Eurotrash assortments had nothing on us.
We met a Czech woman in Wenceslas Square who had come to Glasgow for an X Factor audition and ended up in jail. Had dinner with an Englishman who revealed he had a foot fetish and demanded to see producers Mike and Louise's feet.
Collapsed an entire book shelf of antique books in the famous Shakespeare Co book store in Paris. Were asked by a posh Prague hotel manager, who didn't know his 'l' from his 'j', whether we'd like to film his, er, lobby. At least that's what we decided he meant to say.
Touring Europe to make new show Scottish Passport wasn't all plain sailing. but it sure beats workingOUR man Paul English reveals how flying around Europe to make new show Scottish Passport wasn't always easy.11:24, 5 JAN 2013Updated12:14, 8 JAN 2013Paul English with Scottish Passport crew
Get daily updates directly to your inbox+ SubscribeThank you for subscribing!
Could not subscribe, try again laterInvalid Email
IN Harry Potter, it's Platform 9 the mystical portal for the trip to Hogwarts.
In Scottish Passport, it's Gate 52 the mystical portal for the trip to Paris.
Or it should be. If you spot it. If you realise that Gate 52 in Glasgow Airport's international departures comes before 27, after Dorothy Perkins, next to some bar or other, squeezed in like a secret.
It's there to mock the sort of traveller, or, say, three man TV crew making a holiday series, who turns up early and burns dead time drinking coffee in an airport caf The sort you might see laughing and joking on a casual saunter along the moving walkway and all the way through international departures where they reach Gate 50 and discover there's nothing beyond it but a soft play area, nice views of the Kilpatrick Hills and a kind lady who explains that we've walked past Gate 52, that it's round the other side of the airport, and that we've probably missed our flight.
The sort you'll see sprinting through an airport laden with tripods and bags and cameras to discover there's no "probably" about it and we'd be going to France the long way round.
But this isn't something you'll see in the new series of Scottish Knockoff hermes look alike bags Passport, thanks to the magic of television and a production team who can like the wizards of Platform 9 come back with more potential footage than The Hobbit having magicked two days' worth of filming into the equivalent of a tea break visit to Paris.
After haring around six European destinations on 10 flights in nine days last year, my filming schedule was this incident aside a more relaxed affair for Scottish Passport 2013.
We'd visit half a dozen Euro hot spots Paris, Salou, Gran Canaria, Menorca, Prague and the village of Flims in the Swiss Alps over a period of six weekends in late summer/early autumn.
Our brief was to present a family friendly, everyman guide to the continent, featuring the obligatory straw hat, bad shorts and Scotland's whitest legs.
It began with a return to Flims, Switzerland, an Alpine village in the Graubunden region, popular as a winter sports resort, as I'd discovered on an earlier Knockoff hermes handbags sale ski visit last spring for the Record's travel pages.
Surprisingly, peak season here is summer, with hiking, biking and swimming in the naturally warm mountain lakes apparently drawing more punters each year than the board and ski fraternity.
Our visit coincided with the annual Perseids meteor shower a thrilling celestial light display, which I know from experience can also be viewed from the "Car Park in the Sky" in Paisley if you don't have a Swiss Alp to hand. You won't spot mountain beaver, or marmots as they're Knockoff hermes outlet store known, in Paisley though, where the local wildlife is quite different. So it's worth making that extra effort.
Forever in pursuit of the authentic holiday experience, we encountered our fair share of sundry other pratfalls, not all of them coming from my suitcase.
Amid the beautiful beaches of Menorca, gorgeous tapas of Catalonia and unexpected Knockoff hermes bags sale beauty of inland Gran Canaria, we crashed the car; had anonymous notes pushed under hotel room doors from an angry Spanish driver asking for money; got lost in Menorca; soaked in Salou and saw a man ride off into the Alps with our kit in the back of his pick up truck.
Filming Gonzo style in holiday resorts was often a logistical nightmare. There's nothing a curious tourist enjoys more when on holiday than the sight of a cameraman and a presenter trying to pretend they're not there. No sooner had the latest bus load of tourists trundled past with their wheely cases than someone would pop up over the cameraman's shoulder playing a trumpet.
At times it felt like Antoine De Caunes and his Eurotrash assortments had nothing on us.
We met a Czech woman in Wenceslas Square who had come to Glasgow for an X Factor audition and ended up in jail. Had dinner with an Englishman who revealed he had a foot fetish and demanded to see producers Mike and Louise's feet.
Collapsed an entire book shelf of antique books in the famous Shakespeare Co book store in Paris. Were asked by a posh Prague hotel manager, who didn't know his 'l' from his 'j', whether we'd like to film his, er, lobby. At least that's what we decided he meant to say.
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